What’s in your facilitation toolkit? Mine includes markers, sticky notes, index cards, and flip chart paper. But wait, paper??? Yes. And, I’m not alone. Take for example my colleague Eugene Eric Kim who shares his facilitation toolkit which includes links to his favorite Post It notes and markers.

David Lavenda wrote this excellent article in Fast Company about the history of the Post-It notes and their potential for becoming a killer innovation technology. It talks about the early history of the Post-It note (as a bookmark for memos) and how they made brilliant pivot to innovation and collaboration tools with the rise of digital tools since its invention in 1980. He references one of the thought leaders of the sticky notes as a collaboration tools, Tim Brown, Author and CEO of the design and innovation company Ideo,who recommends the Post-it Note as a perfect tool for brainstorming.

The article points out that paper as an innovation tool is growing and mentions that 3M recently launched a Post-it Note Collaboration website that is a recipe book for Post-It note facilitation. The site is organization into three different process areas:

Process Analysis: Let’s you analyze a process or problem to find ways to simplify or understand a problem.

Project Planning: Includes two methods, one for agile planning and the other for complex projects

This is a smaller collection of recipes to facilitate with Post-It notes, many are described in “Rapid Problem Solving with Post-It Notes” by David Straker published in 1997, but 3M web site gives you step-by-step instructions with links to its much expanded and more colorful product line. The brainstorming methods remind me of the “creativity” techniques such as Michael Michalko’s “Cracking Creativity” but instead of drawing them on paper alone, using sticky notes to make it a collaborate or group process. More recent books on these methods include Gamestorming by Dave Gray, Sunni Brown, and James Macanufo and Visual Meetings by David Sibbet (I took David Sibbet’s workshop on visual meeting facilitation and wrote up some reflections here.)

A few months ago, I listened in on a Google Hangout with Eugene Kim and Dave Gray where they discussed the question “Is documentation learning?” We got to use Dave Gray’s “Board Thing” which is a virtual version of sticky note facilitated group collaboration (that’s a mouthful) or as Dave described that his book, Gamestorming , was a paper prototype for software. It was fascinating to experience this tool and hear how Dave is thinking through what can brought online from a face-to-face experience. For example, with board thing, we all have control over organizing and taking notes on the “sticky notes” – and was interesting to see our emergent collaboration.

Speaking of documentation, that’s where digital tools can come in handy – for example your mobile phone camera. I document everything, including those sticky notes — partly as a report to jog participants memories as well as for my own learning and review of a workshop. 3M just released an app that helps you capture a brainstorming session that produces a scattered wall of Post-it notes. The Post-it Plus app helps you scan the notes, make some sense of them, and share them with your meeting’s participants.

Oh…I like BoardThing! I need to explore how it compares to StormBoard (formerly Edistorm). Nancy…I know you’ve seen both…but not sure you’ve actively compared them. What is your gut reponse to BoardThing vs. StormBoard?

P.S. Would you be able to share the results of your conversations next week about visuals in online learning? That’s right up my alley…and I’m always eager to learn and think deeper about my practice in that regard.